GOLDENEYE

Posted giovedì 20 ottobre 2016 &nbsp&nbsp|&nbsp&nbsp 4730 views &nbsp&nbsp|&nbsp&nbsp Sport &nbsp&nbsp|&nbsp&nbsp Comments (0)It’s a diver’s dream, and Vince Thurkettle is the underwater prospector who came across the biggest gold nugget ever found in British waters. He talks to STEVE WEINMAN

I DON’T KNOW IF Vince Thurkettle is much given to reciting
poetry, but he did quote the above verse from Robert W Service’s The Spell of
the Yukon to me, and it seems to sum up this scuba-diving gold prospector
perfectly.

For a man who has dutifully handed over to the Receiver of
Wreck his biggest single find, a gold nugget valued at some £50,000, he seems
remarkably cheerful.

But as he tells me: “Every little speck of gold I’ve found
around the world has been a thrill – the campfires I’ve sat around, the people
I’ve met, the places. For me it is genuinely the adventure and lifestyle rather
than the desire.

“I’m not a collector. Within reason, when I’ve found stuff
it doesn’t interest me any more. I love the adventure of finding it.”

The 23-carat egg-sized nugget he found was far the largest
ever found in Britain. He spotted it while diving in 5m of water, 40m from the
wreck of the Victorian steam-clipper Royal Charter.

In fact he found it in 2012 and declared it then to the
Receiver, who claimed it as Crown property and should pay a finder’s fee in
return.

However, a veil of secrecy was maintained while Thurkettle
continued to search the area. Only recently did he go public.

The gold would have been aboard the Royal Charter when she
sank in a vicious storm in Dulas Bay on Anglesey’s north-east coast, on 26
October, 1859.

The fast passenger ship had sailed from Australia for
Liverpool carrying many gold-miners, with their finds brought along both as
personal possessions and cargo. These were worth an estimated £120 million at
today’s prices.

As many as 450 passengers and crew died in the sinking,
making it the most disastrous in history off the Welsh coast.

Norfolk-based Thurkettle was overwhelmed by the storm of
media interest that greeted his find, as redtops urged their readers to join the
gold rush in north Wales and get lucky. He’s pretty sure they would be wasting
their time.

“There’s almost nothing material down there now,” he says.
“A hurricane tore the ship to shreds, then the Victorians under the direction
of Lloyds spent four years ripping it to shreds again, when they salvaged not
only the gold but brass, bronze, anything they could get.

“About a third of the stern was lifted, carried away and
broken up. Then we had another 160 years of ad hoc salvage.

“Archaeologists in Wales have asked if the ship should be
protected, but I said there’s nothing left to protect. There’s a location, with
a scatter of iron and an imprint in the clay where the stern was, but you’re
almost looking at a fossil of a wreck rather the wreck itself.

“Still, it’s a fun dive – it’s shallow, it’s safe, there are
no currents, nothing nasty, and you can see bits of iron sticking up through
the sand and part of the bow up on the rocks.”

Vince Thurkettle aboard the ex-NATO combat-support boat used for diving.

A CHARTERED FORESTER, Thurkettle worked for the Forestry Commission for 28 years. He was Deputy Director for the East of England by the time he decided on a drastic life-change in 2005.

“I felt they were wasting my time – I was commuting, attending endless meetings and not spending enough time in forests. I wanted to go diving, to go prospecting, to write a book – so many things.”

Funded by his own Christmas-tree plantation and freelance woodsman work, Thurkettle found that he was able to take four months off each summer to pursue his passion for gold prospecting.

This had started when he was about 20. “Part of my forestry training was in geology, then I got into minerology and met a man who searched for gold. It was one of those incredible moments – within two hours I’d switched from everything to do with rocks and minerals to focusing on gold.” He never did learn the inspirational prospector’s name.

It was the late 1980s, and Thurkettle was soon exploring classic 19th-century Gold Rush locations such as California and the Yukon, but with little success. He needed an angle.

“The old-timers worked really hard, but they didn’t have metal detectors and they couldn’t go under the water. In the Victorian period they had the technology but diving was cutting-edge, difficult and dangerous, and not done routinely.

“So I thought if I learn to dive, a whole new area of gold will open up to me that the old-timers couldn’t reach. It didn’t turn out that easy, but that was the plan!”

At the time he was lecturing at the Forestry Commission’s management training centre near Dumfries. “There’s quite a lot of gold in southern Scotland so in my spare time I’d been panning. Then I learnt to dive.” He trained the ScotSAC way with Dumfries & Galloway Sub-Aqua Club, diving West Coast wrecks and reefs: “It was often just beautiful, a lot of marine life and very good visibility.”

When he returned to England he found himself too busy with job, prospecting and his three children to join another dive club. But he was now equipped for underwater prospecting.

“I had a good understanding of how gold settles, which is a big deal when diving. Sydney Wignall wrote about the Armada wrecks off Ireland’s west coast, and how 11ft of sand and gravel was searched but almost nothing found.

“Then they realised that not only had all the gold, silver and pewter gone into cracks in the bedrock but it had stratified there – gold at the bottom, then silver, then pewter at the top.”

The layering results from the metals’ different specific gravities. “I thought yeah, this is bread and butter to a gold prospector.”

Thurkettle wasn’t searching for nuggets over the seven summers he spent diving off Moelfre in Anglesey – in fact he had never found one before.

“Divers I’ve worked with sometimes give the impression of having watched too many Disney films. They think they’ll see a shipwreck with a box and coins all over the seabed. I was looking for gold dust.

“Most natural gold occurs as dust – flakes or grains. A flake like a porridge oat is a big one. Ken, a friend who used to dive on the Royal Charter in the ’70s, told me that other divers were looking for gold bars, but kit up to look for the dust and you’ll do well.

“He was right and wrong. There is dust everywhere, but it takes an awful lot of little sparkly bits to make a gram, and hundreds of thousands to make an ounce. It didn’t amount to much.”

So how did his big dicovery happen? “There’s a glacial clay that’s partially shattered and fractured around the wreck. I was at 5m following a crevice in this clay, and there was about 4g of gold dust in there.

“I was thinking this is good, I’ll bring back a little suction equipment and suck that gold out. Then all of a sudden I saw this big lump four or five inches in.

Standard kit for a prospector since the classic Gold Rush days – the pan.

EVEN ON THURKETTLE’S occasional recreational dives, as
recently in the Canary Islands, it’s engrained in him to use his sharp eyes to
scour any crevices for metal. “My mother says I’m obsessed, but diving in my
experience is cold, hard and dangerous, and to do it for its own sake is a
higher ideal than I have. I need a reason, like I need a reason to go out in
the forest.

“For some divers the motivation is photography, for some its
depth, but for me it’s finding things. And they don’t have to be valuable.

“When I first dived the Royal Charter with Ken I was looking
for gold-dust, but then you find bullet moulds, knives and forks and broken
crockery with crests.

“The Liverpool & Australia Steam Navigation Company had
as its crest

a kangaroo and a liverbird facing each other – only the
kangaroo is drawn like a large mouse.

“Then it occurred to me, this is the 1850s, the illustrator
had no idea what a kangaroo looked like. I became fascinated by the fragments
and the artefacts and the stories.”

In 2013 he featured in Welsh Wreck of Gold, a three-part
documentary about the Royal Charter for ITV, and in Australia got to handle the
ship’s manifest.

The passengers became more real to him: “You tend to think
of prospectors as these grizzled old Lee Marvin characters, but mostly they
were in their 20s, young, dynamic people.”

And he dismisses the stories of miners drowning because they
were weighed down by their gold.

“If you’re the sort of man or woman who has the grit in the
1850s to go the other side of the world to a new land, survive dysentery,
drought, poisonous snakes and everything else, find your fortune and you’re
within two hours of Liverpool and the bow is just 8m from the shore at low
tide, you’ve worked your socks off for this gold, you’re a go-getter and you’re
going to go for it.

“So I think it’s more that their courage led to their
deaths, not avarice. That’s unkind and unfair to their memory.

“I also think that when you have a huge iron-hulled ship and
bedded limestone just a few yards apart, 60ft waves, it’s a mincing machine.

“It didn’t matter if they were carrying gold or not, they’re
never going to survive that. It’s late October and they’re wearing Victorian
clothing in a hurricane sea.

“The stories are heartbreaking. It’s real history down
there.”

For more great articles like this get the issue of DIVER below or subscribe and save.

Most read articles this month

When she took up scuba 40 years ago, Alexandra Hildred had no idea that her life would become inextricably linked with a Tudor warship. Now the Mary Rose Trust’s Head of Research and Curator of Ordnance & Human Remains, she tells STEVE WEINMAN about the lead-up to the raising of the iconic wreck, still one of the biggest such operations ever attempted. More...

We’ve all heard of the crazy exercises people are trying - from animal yoga to orange theory. But if one of your New Year's resolutions is to get fit and find some sort of exercise you’ll enjoy then maybe you will love one of these… More...

Starting with this issue, and running all through 2018, the Academy learning experience will help you learn more about the records, resources and research skills you need to become the best genealogist you can be. We have case studies for you to pit your wits against, documents for you to decipher, old handwriting for you to tackle, and more… More...

It’s been hitting you in the face since the 1st of February, from the red and pink hues occupying every storefront window, to the heart-shaped boxes of chocolate taking over your local supermarket, there is simply no escaping the mushy romantic vibes of Valentine’s Day.
More...

It’s the one, and the only day of the year that is devoted to a crazy, little thing called love. Where all you need are three words, eight letters and twenty-four hours to steal the heart of the one you most desire.
More...